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Kurd 
- Nation member of an ethnic and linguistic group living in the
Taurus Mountains of eastern Anatolia, the Zagros Mountains of western Iran, northern Iraq,
and adjacent areas. Most of the Kurds live in contiguous areas divided between Iran ,Iraq
, Seryia and Turkey a region generally referred to as Kurdistan
("Land of the Kurds"). A sizable, noncontiguous Kurdish population
also exists in the Khorasan region of northeastern Iran.
- The Kurdish language is a
West Iranian language related to Farsi and Pashto. The Kurds are thought to number more
than 35 million, including communities in Armenia, Georgia, Kazakstan,
Lebanon, and Syria, but sources for this information differ widely because of differing
criteria of ethnicity, religion, and language; statistics may also be manipulated for
political purposes. See map KNN
- The traditional Kurdish way of life was nomadic, revolving around
sheep and goat herding throughout the Mesopotamian plains and the highlands of Turkey and
Iran. Most Kurds practised only marginal agriculture. The enforcement of national
boundaries beginning after World War I impeded the seasonal migrations of the flocks,
forcing most of the Kurds to abandon their traditional ways for village life and settled
farming; others entered non-traditional employment.
- The prehistory of the Kurds is poorly known, but their ancestors
seem to have inhabited the same upland region for millennia. The records of the early
empires of Mesopotamia contain frequent references to mountain
tribes with names resembling "Kurd." The Kardouchoi who attacked Xenophon and
the Ten Thousand in 401 BC (near modern Zakhu, Iraqi Kurdistan, just south
of the Turkish border) may have been Kurds, but some scholars dispute this claim. The name
Kurd can be dated with certainty to the time of the tribes' conversion to Islam in
the 7th century AD. Most Kurds are Sunnite Muslims, but among them there are
also many Sufis and other mystical and heretical sects.
- Despite their long-standing occupation of a particular region of
the world, the Kurds never achieved nation-state status. Their reputation for military
prowess has made them much in demand as mercenaries in many armies.Saladin, the Kurd best
known to the Western world, epitomizes the Kurdish military reputation.
The
principal unit in traditional Kurdish society was the tribe, typically led by a sheikh, or
an aga, whose rule
was firm. Tribal identification and the
sheikh's authority are still felt, though to a lesser degree, in the villages.
Detribalization
proceeded rapidly as Kurdish culture became urbanized and was nominally assimilated into
several nations.
- In traditional Kurdish society, marriage was generally endogamous.
In nonurban areas, males usually marry at age 24 and females at age `18. Households
typically consist of father, mother, and children. Polygamy, permitted by Islamic
law, is sometimes practised, although it is forbidden by civil law in Turkey. The strength
of the extended family's ties to the tribe varies with the way of life. Kurdish women--who
traditionally have been more active in public life than Turkish and Iranian women--as well
as Kurdish men, have taken advantage of urban educational and employment opportunities,
especially in pre-Revolutionary Iran.
Kurdish nationalism, a recent phenomenon, came about
through the conjunction of a variety of factors, including British introduction of the
concept of private property, the partition of traditional Kurdistan by modern neighbouring
states, and the influence of British, U.S., and Soviet interests in the Persian Gulf
region. These factors and others combined with the flowering of a nationalist movement
among a very small minority of urban, intellectual Kurds.
- The first Kurdish newspaper appeared in 1897 and was published at
intervals until 1902. It was revived at Istanbul in 1908 (when the first Kurdish political
club, with an affiliated cultural society, was also founded) and again in Cairo during
World War I. The Treaty of Sèvres, drawn
up in 1920, provided for an autonomous Kurdistan but was never ratified; the Treaty
of Lausanne (1923), which replaced the Treaty of Sèvres, made no mention
of Kurdistan or of the Kurds. Thus the opportunity to unify the Kurds in a nation of their
own was lost. Indeed, Kurdistan after the war was more fragmented than before, and various
separatist movements arose among Kurdish groups. Short-lived armed rebellions occurred,
and in 1931-32 and 1944-45 there were serious conflicts in Iraqi Kurdistan.
- The Kurds of Turkey received particularly unsympathetic treatment
at the hands of the government, which tried to deprive them of their Kurdish identity by
designating them "Mountain Turks," by outlawing the Kurdish language (or
representing it as a dialect of Turkish), and by forbidding them to wear distinctive
Kurdish costume in or near the important administrative cities. The Turkish government
suppressed Kurdish political agitation in the eastern provinces and encouraged the
migration of Kurds to the urbanized western portion of Turkey, thus diluting the
concentration of Kurdish population in the uplands. Kurds also felt strong assimilationist
pressure from the national government in Iran and endured religious persecution by that
country's Shi'ite Muslim majority.
- Iraqi Kurds suffered relatively less cultural suppression. In 1958
the Iraqi monarchy was overthrown, but Kurdish hopes of a measure of administrative
devolution, enhanced status for their language, and a fairer share of social services and
development projects under the new government were not fulfilled. In 1970 a new Ba'thist
government granted the Kurds of Iraq a limited autonomy that was nonetheless declared
inadequate by Kurdish leaders. Unsuccessful, short-lived Kurdish rebellions continued into
the late 20th century; slaughter, dislocation, and starvation were the usual
consequences.
- see more Information about Kurd
1997
By Jalal Najmaddin in
1984